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Jul 18, 2012
07/12
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and -- >> rose: tell us what has happened from a standpoint that gives us some hope when we are sitting next to the patient who was also a researcher. >> well, i think that it is just an unusual situation to take care of one of your colleagues, number one, and number 2 a colleague that works in an overlapping area that is interested in the same things you are. sort of a challenge and unusual situation where you are taking care of someone and knows as much about the disease as you do, sometimes more, because he is incented to read everything in the world. so i am often fending questions about things that i am not yet aware of, because he is really up on everything. but in reality i think it is a good thing for both of us. it has been an interesting interaction between the two of us. i am his physician but i am also his boss. i am his colleague. i was involved in his recruitment as a fellow and then as a faculty member. i work closely with his mentors o are really invested in him and completely committed to his success. so it is almost -- it is almost an oxymoron in academic medicine but
and -- >> rose: tell us what has happened from a standpoint that gives us some hope when we are sitting next to the patient who was also a researcher. >> well, i think that it is just an unusual situation to take care of one of your colleagues, number one, and number 2 a colleague that works in an overlapping area that is interested in the same things you are. sort of a challenge and unusual situation where you are taking care of someone and knows as much about the disease as you...
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Jul 3, 2012
07/12
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brand -- >> everybody, google was the best and people got very used to using it. and it's not, it's not terrible or anything. and so you know, are people willing in their mind-set to think oh, okay, now there's another search engine that i ought to try out. that will take some really good marketing and explaining the value proposition. it's kind of a novell problem. >> rose: what would have been the advantage of google, i mean of microsoft and yahoo! coming together? >> well, the key thing that we were looking at there was the search traffic. because the more traffic you have, the more you can learn. and so the key thing we wanted from yahoo! that we looked at buying the company. this is several years ago, maybe three, four years ago. we got through a big business deal we did with them where their search traffic goes to binge and binge has that informations. >> rose: so you ended up with all the advantages you would have had. >> with the key one. the one that really was necessary. >> rose: to benefit new search reasons right. >> back to philanthropy. let's assume
brand -- >> everybody, google was the best and people got very used to using it. and it's not, it's not terrible or anything. and so you know, are people willing in their mind-set to think oh, okay, now there's another search engine that i ought to try out. that will take some really good marketing and explaining the value proposition. it's kind of a novell problem. >> rose: what would have been the advantage of google, i mean of microsoft and yahoo! coming together? >> well,...
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Jul 31, 2012
07/12
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what will time tell us? >> we have microsoft has a whole bunch of products entering the market right now. >> rose: ah that may be able to -- >> but don't you see early on in a product, i mean, does a product simply enter the market and then later you say, oh it is going to be good. don't you know? >> you know the iphone got pardon my person, got criticized heavily i was going to use a more colorful term. >> rose: by i don't you. >> no all kind of people in the industry, they said to way of building a new cellphone, they are crazy a lot of people thought it was crazy, the first ipod said this is ridiculous. >> rose: reviewed by serious people. >> by people my the technology industry saying looked and overpowered mp-3 player, don't you know apple is in the process of going out out of business so there is a lot of moment in the energy, a lot of heat, a lot of energy. >> rose: how long did you take before yo you figured out it waa stupid judgment. >> i always liked my ipod, i didn't make that judgment. >> rose:
what will time tell us? >> we have microsoft has a whole bunch of products entering the market right now. >> rose: ah that may be able to -- >> but don't you see early on in a product, i mean, does a product simply enter the market and then later you say, oh it is going to be good. don't you know? >> you know the iphone got pardon my person, got criticized heavily i was going to use a more colorful term. >> rose: by i don't you. >> no all kind of people in...
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Jul 24, 2012
07/12
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are they simply kicking the can down the road, to use the term they often use? >> well what they are trying to do is two very hard and important things. one is try to get those economies working again, improve competitiveness and keep them growing again and that is a very difficult and tough process and requires really hard reforms in these countries but also trying to make sure they put in place the institutions to make monetary union work, they have a common currency, a single monetary policy but unlike thees you, national governments in response to how much they borrow and how much they spend, and they have national control over their financial systems, so what they are trying to do alongside those economic reforms. not. >> rose:. >> rose: they can't print money. >> they need to work toward fiscal union, fiscal fromism and they give control over how much they borrow to a central authority and give up control over their financial system to a central authority and have a broader centralback stop to the financial system. those two things, those economic reforms
are they simply kicking the can down the road, to use the term they often use? >> well what they are trying to do is two very hard and important things. one is try to get those economies working again, improve competitiveness and keep them growing again and that is a very difficult and tough process and requires really hard reforms in these countries but also trying to make sure they put in place the institutions to make monetary union work, they have a common currency, a single monetary...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Jul 25, 2012
07/12
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WHUT
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using again political, economic and military pressure. but for that, they needed legitimacy which can only come are the security council. >> you think assad did not bring some of this on himself? >> he did. >> rose: his own country -- >> definitely, he did. he made two basic mistakes, very grave mistakes, and we are saying that openly all along. first of all he did not immediately introduce some dramatic political reforms and dramatic political gestures which would indicate that he is not only sort of promising better future for his country, very different future for his country, but is actually doing it. he has done some things like a new constitution, ending the political monopoly of the basque party but that was not and yes there was some excessive use of force it was not unprovoked because from the onset of crisis we believe there were destructive elements in the crowds which were provoking the government, clearly some excess did take place. >> rose: would you characterize them as terrorists or characterize them as what? >> there were
using again political, economic and military pressure. but for that, they needed legitimacy which can only come are the security council. >> you think assad did not bring some of this on himself? >> he did. >> rose: his own country -- >> definitely, he did. he made two basic mistakes, very grave mistakes, and we are saying that openly all along. first of all he did not immediately introduce some dramatic political reforms and dramatic political gestures which would...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Jul 6, 2012
07/12
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WHUT
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here's how we use them. here are the -- >> they took-- every al qaeda member that they get. >> but charlie if it is all wink wink nod nod and if it isn't clear when we use them, when we don't use them, then the narrative against us is we're an outlaw country. >> rose: what do you think of the president who is courting-- according to the "new york times" is choosing the targets. >> well, i don't know the truth of that. and i wouldn't comment if i did know the truth of that. but i think those operations have to be done very carefully and from what i do know, and i know a fair amount about this, the press reports are exaggerated. and these are very, very careful weapons used only when we identify specific targets and we feel that there's an imminent threat to the united states and no other possibility of capturing those targets. that's what john brennan said if public at the wilson center. >> rose: so only use drone when there's no other way. >> the risk of drones obviously is that it may no not-- there may be
here's how we use them. here are the -- >> they took-- every al qaeda member that they get. >> but charlie if it is all wink wink nod nod and if it isn't clear when we use them, when we don't use them, then the narrative against us is we're an outlaw country. >> rose: what do you think of the president who is courting-- according to the "new york times" is choosing the targets. >> well, i don't know the truth of that. and i wouldn't comment if i did know the...
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Jul 16, 2012
07/12
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out, just us two. his bad shots, my bad shots, our good shots we celebrate that together and i think it brought us closer together, as a father son time was the bonding was better. >> rose: when did you know you had something? >> i got lucky enough to shoot in the 60s at age 12. >> rose: that will tell you. >> and then i happened to shoot in a tournament round back there pensacola, i shot 62 one time, 10 under, 10 kbirdies and 8 pars. >> rose: and what do you attribute it to? is it natural, is it the fact that you had something that other people didn't, was it natural athletic ability. was it mental ability wa, was it? >> definitely not mental. i think it's just athletic ability, just something. my dad was an athlete. my mom is, can play sports, you know so, i think that all that combined i was an athlete. >> rose: but was it especially because of-- only for golf or could you have done that in basketball as well? >> basketball, is a little slow. i was a pretty good pitcher. i played pitcher, first base
out, just us two. his bad shots, my bad shots, our good shots we celebrate that together and i think it brought us closer together, as a father son time was the bonding was better. >> rose: when did you know you had something? >> i got lucky enough to shoot in the 60s at age 12. >> rose: that will tell you. >> and then i happened to shoot in a tournament round back there pensacola, i shot 62 one time, 10 under, 10 kbirdies and 8 pars. >> rose: and what do you...